Cape Breton Post

Student kills 20, wounds more than 50 at school

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Russian authoritie­s in Crimea were searching Thursday for a possible accomplice of the student whose shooting-and-bomb attack on his vocational school killed 20 people and wounded more than 50 others, a top official said.

The 18-year-old student, who authoritie­s said later killed himself in the school’s library, was initially believed to be the only person involved in the carnage Wednesday at the Kerch Polytechni­c College in the Black Sea city of Kerch.

Authoritie­s haven’t provided a motive for the shooting. Teachers and classmates have described the attacker as a shy person with few friends.

But Sergei Aksyonov, the Kremlin-appointed head of Crimea, told Russian news agencies on Thursday that it’s possible the attacker, identified as Vyacheslav Roslyakov, had an accomplice.

“The point is to find out who was coaching him for this crime,” he said.

“He was acting on his own here, we know that. But this

scoundrel could not have prepared this attack on his own, in my opinion, and according to my colleagues.”

The Kerch attack was by far the deadliest by a student in Russia, raising questions about school security.

The vocational school had only a front desk with no security guards.

Russia’s National Guard said Thursday it has now deployed officers and riot police to all schools and colleges in Kerch.

The Kerch attack was also the deadliest school violence in Russia since the 2004 Beslan attack by Chechen separatist­s, which left 333 people dead, many of them children, during a three-day siege. Hundreds of others were wounded.

Yet as the day wore on Thursday, neither Russian investigat­ors nor other authoritie­s followed up on Aksyonov’s comments hinting at a wider attack plot.

President Vladimir Putin even sought to portray the attack as a “result of globalizat­ion”— wider forces that were exporting bad practices into Russia.

Speaking at an internatio­nal policy conference, Putin compared the Kerch shooting to deadly school attacks in the United States. Russia in the past few years has seen several school shootings that authoritie­s say were reportedly inspired by gun violence in the U.S.

Putin said the fact that teenagers get a shotgun and go on a shooting rampage means adults are failing to offer them an alternativ­e to violence.

“Young people with a fragile mental state are creating false heroes for themselves,” he said. “That means that all of us, not only in Russia, but in the world on the whole, are reacting poorly to the fast-changing realities.”

Russia annexed the Crimean Peninsula from Ukraine in 2014. Since then, Russian authoritie­s have repeatedly warned of a terrorism threat coming from unnamed Ukrainian nationalis­ts as well as ethnic Tatars, an indigenous Crimean people.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? A girl lights a candle in memory of the victims of Wednesday’s attack on a vocational college in Kerch, Crimea, at the memorial stone with the word Kerch in the Alexander Garden near the Kremlin in Moscow Thursday.
AP PHOTO A girl lights a candle in memory of the victims of Wednesday’s attack on a vocational college in Kerch, Crimea, at the memorial stone with the word Kerch in the Alexander Garden near the Kremlin in Moscow Thursday.

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